Francisco Zabala - 2014 Sentence Stress In their citation form, every word has a lexical stress – or more.. However, when they occur in context some of them are not stressed at all and
Trang 1Prof Francisco Zabala - 2014
Sentence Stress
In their citation form, every word has a lexical stress – or more However,
when they occur in context some of them are not stressed at all and may
there are two classes of words: those that carry more meaning and those
whose function is more grammatical and less loaded with information
Imagine that you get these two text messages: which is the more
informative?
The second message, though ungrammatical, is meaningful If we assemble
the two messages together and read the text aloud, we can see that those
meaningful words retain their stress
1 Read this conversation Underline all the content words
R OB : I was sure I that I had my licence with me
S AM : I can help you look for it When did you see it last?
R OB : Not for some days I have been driving very little There is a lot of traffic, so I try
not to drive into town
S AM : I see Do you take a bus or the tube?
R OB : Either I think that public transport is better for the environment and cheaper
than a car park!
2 Look at these highlighted words from the text and choose the correct alternative:
a Was in line 1 rhymes with: Oz – fuzz – neither
b Can in line 2 rhymes with: man – American – bun – barn
c For in line 3 rhymes with: four – chauffeur – neither
d That in line 6 rhymes with: Albert – hat – heart
Weneed somecash
W
O
R
D
S
Content or Lexical
- More information
- Keep their stress
NAVA:
Nouns Adjectives Verbs Adverbs
Function or Grammar
- Less information
- Unstressed (if monosyllabic) CAPPA:
Conjunctions Auxiliaries Pronoun Prepositions Articles